Commonwealth v Bank of New South Wales

Commonwealth v Bank of New South Wales

Commonwealth v Bank of New South Wales (1949) 79 CLR 497; [1950] AC 235 - popularly known as the Bank Nationalisation Case - was a Privy Council decision that affirmed the High Court of Australia's decision in Bank of New South Wales v Commonwealth, promoting the theory of "individual rights" to ensure freedom of interstate trade and commerce. The case dealt primarily with Section 92 of the Australian Constitution

Contents

Background

Comfortable in government after two strong election wins, the Labor government of Ben Chifley announced in 1947 its intention to nationalise private banks in Australia. It achieved this process by passing the Banking Act 1947. The policy proved very controversial, and the Bank of New South Wales challenged the constitutional validity of the law. The High Court found specific provisions of the law were invalid and struck them down. The Commonwealth government appealed the decision in the Privy Council.

Decision

The Privy Council endorsed the previous High Court decision in adopting the individual rights approach. Provisions of the Commonwealth law prohibited private banks from carrying out interstate business banking. Interstate banking transactions under the law were thus not "absolutely free" and hence in violation of Section 92 of the Constitution. The Lords argued that a simple legislative prohibition of interstate trade and commerce would be constitutionally invalid, but a law seeking to regulate or prescribe rules as to the manner of trade and commerce would not necessarily be in breach of Section 92. In addition, the act was held to be not an act with respect to banking, and therefore invalid under s51(viii), the banking power.

The High Court of Australia also looked to the provision's unconstitutionality with respect to s51(xxxi) the "acquisition of property on just terms" provision, (made famous in the Australian Movie, The Castle[citation needed]). The problem with acquisition arose out of the Act's sections detailing the appointment of new directors for all private banks with the power to control, manage, direct and dispose of assets of those banks. The court held, per Dixon J at 348-51 that this was a "circuitous device to acquire indirectly the substance of proprietary interest."

In addition, the High Court also examined the unconstitutionality of the compensation mode set up, to provide shareholders with the chance to gain compensation in respect of their holdings. The act set up a "Court of Claims" which the High Court held, at 368 to be repugnant under s75(iii) of the Constitution as it effectively ousted the jurisdiction of the High Court. In addition, due to its unconstitutionality the act provided no valid provision for compensation for the acquisition of shares or assets.

This case showed the Australian judiciary's power to strike down legislation due to its unconstitutionality - it was important due to the many grounds of the constitution it covered.

See also

References

  • Winterton, G. et al. Australian federal constitutional law: commentary and materials, 1999. LBC Information Services, Sydney.
  • Bank of New South Wales v Commonwealth (1948) 76 CLR 1

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bank of New South Wales v Commonwealth — Infobox Court Case name=Bank of NSW v Commowealth court=High Court of Australia date decided=11 August 1948 full name=Bank of New South Wales v The Commonwealth citations= judges= Latham CJ, McTiernan, Starke, Dixon, Rich and Williams JJ prior… …   Wikipedia

  • State Bank of New South Wales — The State Bank of New South Wales was a bank that was owned by the Government of New South Wales. It existed from 1933 until 2000, when it was taken over by the Commonwealth Bank. The bank started in 1933 as the Rural Bank of NSW, which was a… …   Wikipedia

  • New South Wales Swifts — ANZ Championship team Franchise information …   Wikipedia

  • New South Wales v Commonwealth (2006) — New South Wales v Commonwealth Court High Court of Australia Full case name New South Wales Ors v Commonwealth Date decided …   Wikipedia

  • New South Wales D50 class locomotive — New South Wales D50 class 5154 climbs the bank out of Fassifern with a non air coal train. Power type Steam Builder Beyer, Peacock Co. (151) Dübs Co. (5) Neilson Co. (10) North British Locomotive Co. (8 …   Wikipedia

  • New South Wales — NSW redirects here. For the historical region of Canada, see New Britain (Canada). For other uses, see NSW (disambiguation). Coordinates: 32°0′S 147°0′E / 32°S 147°E …   Wikipedia

  • Corowa, New South Wales — Infobox Australian Place | type = town name = Corowa state = nsw caption = A view of the main street of Corowa lga = Corowa Shire Council postcode = 2646 pop = 5,628 pop footnotes = census 2006 AUS|id=SSC16843|name=Corowa (State… …   Wikipedia

  • Queanbeyan, New South Wales — Infobox Australian Place | type = city name = Queanbeyan state = nsw caption = Queanbeyan photographed from the air. The Ridgeway is in the right foreground, Jerrabobmerra in the top left. pop = 36,331 (2004) poprank = 37th density = 210 est =… …   Wikipedia

  • Woodstock, New South Wales — Infobox Australian Place | type = town name = Woodstock state = nsw caption = Royal Hotel, Woodstock lga = Cowra Shire postcode = 2793 est = 1888 pop = 249 2001 elevation= maxtemp = mintemp = rainfall = stategov = Orange fedgov = Calare dist1 =… …   Wikipedia

  • University of New South Wales — Coat of Arms of UNSW Latin: Universitas Nova Cambria Australis Motto Scientia Manu et Mente (Latin) M …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”